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・ Oncale v. Sundowner Offshore Services, Inc.
・ Oncallı
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・ Once
・ ONCE (cycling team)
・ Once (Diana Vickers song)
・ Once (film)
・ Once (Morris Gleitzman novel)
・ Once (musical)
・ Once (Nightwish album)
・ Once (Pearl Jam song)
Once (Roy Harper album)
・ Once (The Tyde album)
・ Once - 30 de Diciembre (Buenos Aires Underground)
・ Once a Bum, Always a Dodger
・ Once a Catholic
・ Once a Cop
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・ Once a Crook (NCIS)
・ Once a Day
・ Once a Doctor
・ Once a Gangster
・ Once a Greek
・ Once a Hero
・ Once a Hero (disambiguation)
・ Once a Hero (film)


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Once (Roy Harper album) : ウィキペディア英語版
Once (Roy Harper album)


''Once'' is the sixteenth studio album by English rock/folk singer-songwriter Roy Harper, released in 1990.〔(Allmusic entry for ''Once''. ) Retrieved November 2009.〕
==History==
David Gilmour, Kate Bush, Nick Harper and Nigel Mazlyn Jones appear on the album, with Gilmour and Bush both on the title track.
Harper supported the release of the album by touring the UK. One of the concerts took place at the Dominion Theatre (a West End theatre on Tottenham Court Road in the London Borough of Camden) and was filmed. The concert took place on 22 November 1990, the same night Margaret Thatcher announced her resignation as Prime Minister which Harper referenced closing the concert by stating "...it's been a day to remember on many levels, it can only get better...if you can spoke the wheel of the present authority, then do it as quickly as possible, we need a change...". The concert film was later released as ''Roy Harper Once - Live''.
The track "The Black Cloud of Islam" is a despairing castigation of radical Islam.
"I'm sick to the teeth of the news on the screen
Of hisbollah scum and jihad the obscene
Whose men plant the bombs and then live feeling free
To watch women and children be killed on T. V.
Which satan delivers a child a death curse
In the name of a worn out collection of verse
I've not read the book so I cannot recite
But I'd bet Salman Rushdie is just about right
Underneath the black cloud of islam."

The song provoked some criticism, to which Harper responded, in 2006, when he wrote: "I let my guard slip. I knew that I’d let it slip. I wanted it to slip. I was absolutely sick of being politically correct. I am not politically correct, I never have been..". His stated reason for penning the song was his "feelings of despair" about his "worst dreams coming true" about religion gaining ground. Religion, he stated on his personal blog, was something he regarded with the "deepest possible suspicion" and now, to his horror, he could see it "about to storm the world" and "take over whole swathes of humanity"; a thought that he detested and made him "want to die on the spot".〔 In a later interview with the ''The Daily Telegraph'', the matter of this song was raised. Harper asserted that he wrote the song "as a liberal, not as a racist" and was inspired to do so by the 1988 Lockerbie Bombing.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Once (Roy Harper album)」の詳細全文を読む



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